4.6 Article

Magnetic Behavior of Virgin and Lithiated NiFe2O4 Nanoparticles

Journal

CRYSTALS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cryst13010069

Keywords

XRD; FTIR; HRTEM; virgin and lithia-doped NiFe2O4; squareness; antisite defects; magnetization; magneto crystalline anisotropy

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A series of virgin and lithia-doped Ni ferrites were synthesized using egg-white-mediated combustion, and their properties were characterized using various techniques such as XRD, FTIR, and HRTEM. Lithia doping was found to enhance the structural parameters, magnetic properties, and morphological properties of the ferrites. The presence of nanoscale particles and shape modification were observed in the lithia-doped ferrite. Additionally, an increase in dopant content led to a decrease in magnetization and an increase in coercivity.
A series of virgin and lithia-doped Ni ferrites was synthesized using egg-white-mediated combustion. Characterization of the investigated ferrites was performed using several techniques, specifically, X-ray Powder Diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). XRD-based structural parameters were determined. A closer look at these characteristics reveals that lithia doping enhanced the nickel ferrite lattice constant (a), unit cell volume (V), stress (epsilon), microstrain (sigma), and dislocation density (delta). It also enhanced the separation between magnetic ions (L-A and L-B), ionic radii (r(A), r(B)), and bond lengths (A-O and B-O) between tetrahedral (A) and octahedral (B) locations. Furthermore, it enhanced the X-ray density (Dx) and crystallite size (d) of random spinel nickel ferrite displaying opposing patterns of behavior. FTIR-based functional groups of random spinel nickel ferrite were determined. HRTEM-based morphological properties of the synthesized ferrite were investigated. These characteristics of NiFe2O4 particles, such as their size, shape, and crystallinity, demonstrate that these manufactured particles are present at the nanoscale and that lithia doping caused shape modification of the particles. Additionally, the prepared ferrite's surface area and total pore volume marginally increased after being treated with lithia, depending on the visibility of the grain boundaries. Last, but not least, as the dopant content was increased through a variety of methods, the magnetization of virgin nickel ferrite fell with a corresponding increase in coercivity. Uniaxial anisotropy, rather than cubic anisotropy, and antisite and cation excess defects developed in virgin and lithia-doped nickel ferrites because the squareness ratio (M-r/M-s) was less than 0.5. Small squareness values strongly recommend using the assessed ferrites in high-frequency applications.

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